Portrait of an Age: Victorian EnglandOxford University Press, 1977 - 423 páginas In print continuously since its first appearance in 1936, this study of the Victorian era from 1837-1901 is regarded as the greatest history of that time ever written. An immortal classic, the greatest longest essay ever written. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 53
Página 13
... facts were mistaken or at least misdated , some of his judgements were clearly perfunctory , for they were not sup- ported by any reasonable interpretation of the documents he cited in their favour . Now it is probable that few people ...
... facts were mistaken or at least misdated , some of his judgements were clearly perfunctory , for they were not sup- ported by any reasonable interpretation of the documents he cited in their favour . Now it is probable that few people ...
Página 14
... fact that what was presumably his method of work , the consign- ment of what he read to his memory so that in due course it was fused into a coherent whole by his imagination , was likely to produce a more valuable synthesis than could ...
... fact that what was presumably his method of work , the consign- ment of what he read to his memory so that in due course it was fused into a coherent whole by his imagination , was likely to produce a more valuable synthesis than could ...
Página 134
... fact a peculiarity of their own . Nowhere else in the world had the factory system of capitalist , manager , and labourer been so thoroughly applied to the land : nowhere else was the cultivator a precarious tenant of the soil he ...
... fact a peculiarity of their own . Nowhere else in the world had the factory system of capitalist , manager , and labourer been so thoroughly applied to the land : nowhere else was the cultivator a precarious tenant of the soil he ...
Contenido
A Biographical Memoir by Sir George | 1 |
INTRODUCTION TO THIS EDITION | 9 |
INTRODUCTION TO THE SECOND | 17 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
appeared authority became become believed Bill Board body British called Cambridge century Charles Church civil classes College Commission Commons criticism described doubt early effect election England English Essay fact Factory followed force George give given Gladstone Government hand House ideas important increase industry interest Ireland Irish John labour land later less Letters Liberal lived London Lord Lord John Russell means Mill mind ministers moral movement natural never once opinion Oxford Parliament party perhaps period political Poor Law practice probably published Queen question Radical reason refers Reform religious Report result Review seems social society speech suggested things thought tion Trade University Victorian vols vote whole wrote Young
Referencias a este libro
Making Welfare Work: Reconstructing Welfare for the Millennium Frank Field Sin vista previa disponible - 2001 |